SB SPACE @ ARL $ARLS024 ARLS024 Hams Contact Atlantis/Mir Astronauts ZCZC AS04 QST de W1AW Space Bulletin 024 ARLS024 From ARRL Headquarters Newington, CT November 17, 1995 To all radio amateurs SB SPACE ARL ARLS024 ARLS024 Hams Contact Atlantis/Mir Astronauts ARRL has received dozens of reports from amateurs that have made successful voice contacts with the crew aboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis and the Mir Space Station Complex. The two spacecraft have been docked together since Wednesday, and are orbiting 245 miles above the earth at approximately 17,000 mph. Earlier this week, the Atlantis astronauts completed 5 scheduled ham radio contacts with US students as part of the Shuttle Amateur Radio EXperiment or SAREX. These groups included students from Franklin Junior High School in Pocatello, Idaho, Norwalk County schools in Connecticut, Lake Street Elementary School in Crown Point, Indiana, Round Lake-area schools in Illinois, and Quimby Oak Junior High School in San Jose, California. The students were assisted by their local Amateur Radio clubs and many AMSAT SAREX volunteers. Amateurs trying to make random contacts with the astronauts should be aware the crew is using separate receive and transmit frequencies. Do not transmit on the shuttle's downlink frequency. The downlink is your receiving frequency. The uplink is your transmitting frequency. The FM voice downlink is 145.84 MHz. The FM voice uplinks are 144.45 and 144.47 MHz. The crew will not favor either uplink frequency, so your ability to communicate with SAREX will be the ''luck of the draw.'' Transmit only when the shuttle is within range of your station, and when the astronauts are on-the-air. The astronaut's call signs are KB5AWP, KC5NRI, N5SCW, KC5ACR, and KC5RNJ. There is no hardware to support packet radio contacts from the shuttle during this flight. QSL cards and reports may be sent to ARRL EAD, STS-74 QSL, 225 Main Street, Newington, CT 06111-1494, USA. Include the following information in your QSL or report: STS-74, date, time in UTC, frequency and mode (FM voice). In addition, you must also include a SASE using a large, business-sized envelope (10) if you wish to receive a card. The Greater Norwalk Amateur Radio Club in Norwalk, CT has generously volunteered to manage the cards for this mission. Thanks to SAREX Volunteer Gil Carman, WA5NOM, at NASA Johnson Space Center for generating the following Keplerian element set, JSC-914: Mir-Atl 1 16609U 86017A 95319.63436307 .00005442 00000-0 65227-4 0 9141 2 16609 51.6445 119.1436 0002776 342.3991 17.7067 15.58119804556564 Satellite: Mir-Atl Catalog number: 16609 Epoch time: 95319.63436307 = yrday.fracday Element set: 914 Inclination: 51.6445 deg RA of node: 119.1436 deg Eccentricity: .0002776 Arg of perigee: 342.3991 deg Mean anomaly: 17.7067 deg Mean motion: 15.58119804 rev/day Decay rate: 5.44200E-05 rev/day sq Epoch rev: 55656 Checksum: 319 Note: This element set is valid for the Atlantis/Mir docked configuration until undocking on Nov 18 at 0815 UTC. The shuttle landing is scheduled at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida for November 20, 1995 at 1734 UTC. NNNN /EX